This methodology is inherently flawed. Tinfoil hats only work if they’re made with real tin, and the aluminum foil that the modern consumer products industry replaced it with isn’t enough to protect your thought processes the way tin did.

Furthermore, as you probably know, one of the byproducts of the aluminum refining process is fluorides, which are being added to our water supply because of a Commie plot against America’s precious bodily fluids, but this paragraph will probably never make it past the moderators.

This link isn’t a debunking, but it does elucidate some of the story behind the controversy about the papers.

The research for the initial paper (NASA faked the moon landing – therefore (climate) science is a hoax: An anatomy of the motivated rejection of science) included a survey. The survey was released and publicized on 6 to 8 blogs on the pro-science side on August 28/29/30 2010. The suggestion was made in the comment sections of these that the over-the-top nature of the conspiracy questions invited spoof responses, and that it was too obvious that the intention was to link skepticism about climate-change to having other wacky beliefs. In September 5 – 2? invitations to publicize the survey were sent not by the lead author but by an unknown assistant to 5 anti-science blogs, few of which found the invitation compelling enough to publicize to their readers.
One participant in the survey saved screen-shots of the questions:http://www.ambitgambit.com/2012/09/06/fish-rot-from-the-head-part-1/

Homer too. His work was written by a different Homer, a secret that has been suppressed by the Classico-academic conspiracy to better access the mountains of funding available for the study of ancient Greece.

Strangely enough, elaborate conspiracies are incredibly dull. I watched a “reptiloid expose” by David Icke and expected to be fascinated by the depictions, I ended up incredibly bored by all the unimaginative attention-seekers. For all the otherworldness I had in my head, they couldn’t come up with anything relatively science-fiction or epic in scale.

Oh, it’s easy enough to concoct one. Easiest is to cast doubt on the authenticity of the space shuttle Enterprise. It could have been a stand-in for either (both?) of the doomed launches.

Once you replace the ship, then the crew suffers a standard Capricorn One style fate. Except in one variation, Columbia’s crew is even today living on the seekret Nazi moon base on the far side of the moon.